Is NPR any good there?fair point. NPR/PBS are gov't and locally funded.
They do beg for money from typically liberal viewers though, so while maybe they aren't feeding shareholders, they are catering to an audience.
Is NPR any good there?fair point. NPR/PBS are gov't and locally funded.
They do beg for money from typically liberal viewers though, so while maybe they aren't feeding shareholders, they are catering to an audience.
ok ozy babaDon't censor yourself mate. Let it out. Be free!
From my perspective, as someone who believes that reality has a somewhat liberal tendency, yeah, NPR is pretty good.Is NPR any good there?
Yeah those idiots are fed those lines from corporate assholes trying to influence voting for their own benefit.From my perspective, as someone who believes that reality has a somewhat liberal tendency, yeah, NPR is pretty good.
If you ask someone who voted for Trump or typically identifies as Republican, they're a bunch of librul snowflakes with an axe to grind who couldn't make it at a profitable corporate station.
it is a strong word must admitOh jesus! Settle down. No need to get all pornographic out here.
Just joshing
All news agencies are corporate, though.
Where do you get your news, from the CIA via your fillings?
Is NPR any good there?
From my perspective, as someone who believes that reality has a somewhat liberal tendency, yeah, NPR is pretty good.
If you ask someone who voted for Trump or typically identifies as Republican, they're a bunch of librul snowflakes with an axe to grind who couldn't make it at a profitable corporate station.
I guess but joe’s gonna have to put outThe BBC has kind of shit the bed and become crap of late. The Tories refuse to he interviewed by them because they don't want any criticism and I think one of their best mates got a head job there so it's wishy washy and not informative at all any more
I agree.There are four possiblities.
You can:
obey the law without believing in the underlying moral concept that brought the law into place.
break the law without believing in the underlying moral concept that brought the law into place.
obey a law where you DO believe/agree with the moral concept it represents.
break a law where you DO believe/agree with the moral concept it represents.
You don't need a moral compass to not break the law.